Lucifer was charmin' too, if y'know what I mean.jdogmoney said:Mumei, you've got me watching Youtube videos with Dawkins in them! It's okay, I wasn't planning on sleeping anyway, so you've given me something to do.
It's funny how much people hate this charming little British guy.
jdogmoney said:Mumei, you've got me watching Youtube videos with Dawkins in them! It's okay, I wasn't planning on sleeping anyway, so you've given me something to do.
It's funny how much people hate this charming little British guy.
jdogmoney said:Haha. I read Paradise Lost. He's clearly the guy we should root for. Power to the people, man! Down with dictatorship!
Regarding your first paragraph, it would seem to be a pretty good bet. If you lined up fossils from when they first appeared on the scene, then it's no surprise that we see a general gradation (though still room for variation) to man. If evolution was not true, then there is no coherent expectation for such fossils. God could easily have created a flying primate with three hearts and reptile eyes instead. But with evolution, there must be an evolutionary pathway between us and our primate brethren. The very fact of taxonomy is a powerful argument for evolution. To even argue about gaps is to admit the possible evolutionary pathway between two organisms. Here's a cool chart about hominin brain size:Dogenzaka said:Because if I have a bunch of fossils of creatures that seem similar to each other, and a theory, I can't just assume that they all evolved from a common ancestor. That's an assumption, and not very scientific.
I'm a Christian, so I have no reason to see why it's not possible that these other homo-genus species were just animals created by God and then died out like any other species that goes extinct on this planet.
Mumei said:![]()
There's a really, really great playlist on that channel of him having a sort of... informal conversation / interview with George Coyne, who is a described on The Wiki as being, "a Jesuit priest, astronomer, and former director of the Vatican Observatory and head of the observatorys research group which is based at the University of Arizona in Tucson, Arizona."
It's a very interesting discussion, and it is quite pleasant, too.
On Book 3. As deluded as he might be (I mean, the fact is, God is omnipotent and the rebelling angels... aren't), he certainly has a way with words.
Have you read The Divine Comedy? I just finished that late last year. Inferno > Purgatorio > Paradiso, for me. Paradiso was not nearly as interesting in terms of imagery as either of the previous two, and I never really felt like the horrors we saw earlier were sufficiently justified (what justification there was essentially boiled down to "God is just, so their punishment is just"). I did really enjoy the fact that Dante had this great habit of bending the rules for certain historical figures whom he liked, though. For instance, Trajan got to be up in Heaven - in a pretty high sphere, as I recall - because of prayers that brought him to that level, instead of him being stuck in Limbo with all the other Perfectly Good People Before Jesus.
jdogmoney said:Yeah, I'm a hippie, so I get just as riled up about the waste of an animal as I would a human. And I'm pretty sure grain isn't a good enough sacrifice for God. Wasn't that the deal with Cain and Abel? Cain grew stuff and Abel had animals, so when they both sacrificed what they had, Cain gave fruits and Abel killed one of his animals. God liked Abel's sacrifice better, which led to jealousy, which led to fratricide, which is all, I realize, very beside the point.
I haven't read Kierkegaard yet, I'm afraid.
I say it's pretty barbaric to require the death of anything to make a deity happy, no matter the circumstances. Would you say it's not barbaric to slaughter a calf to make sure Apollo gives you a lot of sunny days?
onipex said:As far as I remember it had nothing to do with the death of an animal. It was that Abel gave up his best and Cain did not. Able gave the first born of his flock with their best parts, but it does not say Cain gave the best of his crop or even a large portion of it.
Aaron said:I don't know if this topic has been hit yet, but why is the Bible the ultimate source, for Christan at least. It's not the first religious text by any margin. Even if you say something like the people who wrote the Torah didn't get it right, and Jesus set things straight, can you just ignore the Koran? Mohamed did pretty much the same thing.
threenote said:This is funny, so now we've established that you don't know a lick of science--but you don't know your own religion, either?
There was no rain. A mist came up instead (Genesis 2:5-6)
By faith Noah, when warned about things not yet seen, in holy fear built an ark to save his family. By his faith he condemned the world and became heir of the righteousness that comes by faith. (Hebrews 11:7)
Let's not forget this gem:
I have set my rainbow in the clouds, and it will be the sign of the covenant between me and the earth. (Gen. 9:13)
jdogmoney said:Genesis 4:2-5
"...Now Abel kept flocks, and Cain worked the soil. 3 In the course of time Cain brought some of the fruits of the soil as an offering to the LORD. 4 But Abel brought fat portions from some of the firstborn of his flock. The LORD looked with favor on Abel and his offering, 5 but on Cain and his offering he did not look with favor. So Cain was very angry, and his face was downcast."
Seems God isn't a vegetarian.
Zaptruder said:Dissonant christians screaming:
METAPHOR! OBVIOUS METAPHOR! *HOO BOY!*
JGS said:No, he's an omnivore. There were grain offerings as well. The reason his offer was reject is in 4:6. He wasn't a good guy which is the real reason he killed his brother.
Cain was no hippie tree hugging vegetarian that's for sure. Besides leg of lamb is tasty.
JGS said:Dissonant Christian here, so let me start screaming....No wait, why would I do that again over the verses mentioned?
Uh-oh, I just realized I'm strawman guy
Zaptruder said:You persist in arbitarily redefining these concepts such that they work.
Here's the big catch; they're not functions/abilities that can work together. In practice, they contradict the shit out of each other, and no amount of mental gymnastics provides a concrete and absolute rebuttal against it otherwise.
Zaptruder said:The context in which I replied to you in is that you're saying: Been omnipotent (i.e. all powerful), just means that he's...
No man, it means he's all powerful and capable of doing anything and everything he damn well wishes.
Trying to define it anyway else is just an attempt to assuage the cognitive dissonance that the concept of god creates.
Zaptruder said:Similarly, trying to rationalize what an all powerful, all knowing being would do with his all power and all knowing is just you attempting to reconcile the seeming contradictions on this issue.
jdogmoney said:The reason given is that he was jealous of God's favor.
4:6 is God saying "U mad?"
This doesn't help Cain's jealousy.
Genesis 4:6-7 (New International Version)
6 Then the LORD said to Cain, "Why are you angry? Why is your face downcast? 7 If you do what is right, will you not be accepted? But if you do not do what is right, sin is crouching at your door; it desires to have you, but you must master it."
That is the first time I heard Jephtha gave his daughter as an actual sacrifice. The whole ending of the chapter seemed to indicated she was sent off to the temple. I'll have to reread it since it's not that long. Her being literally sacrificed would not make sense so I got nothing!:lol
And Jephthah made a vow to the LORD: "If you give the Ammonites into my hands, whatever comes out of the door of my house to meet me when I return in triumph from the Ammonites will be the Lord's, and I will sacrifice it as a burnt offering."
...
When Jephthah returned to his home in Mizpah, who should come out to meet him but his daughter, dancing to the sound of tambourines! She was an only child. Except for her he had neither son nor daughter. When he saw her, he tore his clothes and cried, "Oh! My daughter! You have made me miserable and wretched, because I have made a vow to the LORD that I cannot break." "My father," she replied, "you have given your word to the LORD. Do to me just as you promised, now that the LORD has avenged you of your enemies, the Ammonites. But grant me this one request," she said.
...
After the two months, she returned to her father and he did to her as he had vowed.
There is this thought that basic morality would not include killing which isn't true. It's not necessarily moral bankruptcy to kill someone. The reality is that since God does it all the time and people do it all the time and animals do it all the time, killing in and of itself, could be justified. I think of it as the Baby Hitler dilemna.
JGS said:Please use your non-gymnastic abillity to explain how they contradict each other? Have you doene that yet? I didn't think so.
Uhh, I never talked about omnipotence and I disagree with you view of omniscience. No one is redefining anything, I just know how people hate dictionaries around here.
I'm not doing that. Why can you not get that through your [thick?] head that I am referencing what is said he can do in the Bible. This has nothing to do with whether or not you believe it (Who cares?) or my opinion. It has to do with your reading ability which you fail at.
You expect me to reject what the Scripture says in favor of your whacky theory about him which makes no sense to begin with? Then I'm supposed to take whacky theory and extend it to the 40 or so other writers that failed in comparison to your genius fallacy finding skills? Riiiggghhhttt.
Dabookerman said:This is a simple question really. Interested to know. Everyone who believes in Creationism, or does not believe in the fact of evolution, where are you from?
That's all.
Dogenzaka said:Uhhh, because the Bible says God created us specially and in His image. Reason enough. Do you see animals talking about the origin of the universe? No. You see humans doing so. We may be biologically similar, but there is a distinct difference between a human and an animal.
Dogenzaka said:I'd agree. The entire point of discussing this is pointless because we all know very well that an online atheist isn't going to "convert" me, and an online Christian likely won't convert an atheist.
soul creator said:
Shanadeus said:So from the illusion of free will to a silly discussion about the validity of evolution and now back again to the illusion of free will.
Maybe the The Official Religion Thread really is cyclical?
jdogmoney said:Yeah, I'm a hippie, so I get just as riled up about the waste of an animal as I would a human. And I'm pretty sure grain isn't a good enough sacrifice for God. Wasn't that the deal with Cain and Abel? Cain grew stuff and Abel had animals, so when they both sacrificed what they had, Cain gave fruits and Abel killed one of his animals. God liked Abel's sacrifice better, which led to jealousy, which led to fratricide, which is all, I realize, very beside the point.
Zaptruder said:Dissonant christians screaming:
METAPHOR! OBVIOUS METAPHOR! *HOO BOY!*
jdogmoney said:Mumei, you've got me watching Youtube videos with Dawkins in them! It's okay, I wasn't planning on sleeping anyway, so you've given me something to do.
It's funny how much people hate this charming little British guy.
Zaptruder said:People have pointed out the contradictions of an all good, all powerful, all knowing god repeatedly in this thread.
But to reiterate, the problems of evil, suffering, etc means that such an entity is contradicted.
Zaptruder said:You might wish to delve into the warmup arguments of free will and all that; but then why is having free will considered a good thing? Better than the requisite and untold amounts of suffering that we go through in order to have it, including the large chance for eternal anguish and suffering (if we are to believe religion)?
Zaptruder said:Moreover, do we really have free will, or an illusion of free will?
Do you have the free will to jump 10 meters into the air?
Do you have the free will to cut your own arm off right now? It may be 'physically' possible, but your own sense of self preservation and a whole host of other very good reasons remove it as a remote possibility.
You might even mentally consider it right now; but the gulf between you actually cutting your arm off, and simply toying with the idea is the gulf between free will and the illusion of free will.
I agree with the dictionary definition.Zaptruder said:Your view of omniscience/all knowing is that such a being has the ability to choose to know anything he damn well pleases. The common view of omniscience/all knowing is that it is as dictionary defines: Infinite knowledge.
It may seem a small distinction, but the complete and utter bullshit you pull here marks the kind of mental gymnastic bullshit that you regularly pull to make the non-cohesive ideas of the bible and religion work in your mind.
There is a distinction between:
inherent omniscience - the ability to know anything that one chooses to know and can be known.
total omniscience - actually knowing everything that can be known.
Some modern theologians argue that God's omniscience is inherent rather than total, and that God chooses to limit his omniscience in order to preserve the freewill and dignity of his creatures.[2] Certain theologians of the 16th Century, comfortable with the definition of God as being omniscient in the total sense, in order for worthy beings' abilities to choose freely, embraced the doctrine of predestination.
Strawman? One issue at a time. The Bible is clear about God's abilities of knowledge. Don't replace your inability/refusal to to read it on vagueries and poor writing.Zaptruder said:And when are you going to get it through your thick head that the bible and other holy books are written so vaguely, so poorly, that it allows for all manners of disingenious interpretation. My interpretation in your opinion is disingenious, in my opinion, your interpretation is also disingenious. Who is right? Who is wrong?
Once again, you don't know me well enough to know my history. However, you should have read enough in this thread to know that I rejected religion as easily as you. I just didn't close my brain to the possiblity I was wrong.Zaptruder said:No of course I don't expect you to reject the ideas and notions that you've built your life around. To do so would cause a mental cave-in that you're simply not ready to face.
That is the nature of faith, and if you have it, all the evidence, arguments, rationality... none of it will shake your belief in the thing in which you have faith.
Now that might sound awesome to you religious folk, but that is to us non-theists the mark of absolute delusion.
BladeoftheImmortal said:You'd think a god that loved all his creations equally and with unconditional love could find it in his mighty heart of hearts to not choose favorites. Ah well.
JGS said:Further, you flatter yourself way to much to think you have the reasoning ability to change anyone's mind on something. Your whole argument is "Because I said so", and that's supposed to convince me of something? OK.
the_concierge said:I'm 23 and was raised Catholic. All my life I grew up learning about God, the Bible and Jesus through my school, my parents, visits to church. For many years I sincerely believed that the Catholic conception of God existed as described in the Bible. I can name countless times and experiences which provided me with tangible evidence that God existed.
Without going into too much detail, I'm at a point in my life where I'm experiencing intense cognitive dissonance regarding my faith. Aside from the conditioned mental cues in my mind which have been reinforced over the past 23 years I feel that I have become increasingly agnostic if not atheistic.
Needless to say, it's a fairly complex and emotional state to be in. Is anyone else experience / has anyone gone through a similar experience? What led you to that point? What was the outcome? I'm not looking for answers, just shared experiences.
I've not experienced the same thing myself, but there have been a few interesting threads dealing with similar situations.the_concierge said:Is anyone else experience / has anyone gone through a similar experience? What led you to that point? What was the outcome? I'm not looking for answers, just shared experiences.
DeusTrinitas said:"For the word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God. For it is written, 'I will destroy the wisdom of the wise, and the discernment of the discerning I will thwart.' Where is the one who is wise? Where is the scribe? Where is the debater of this age? Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world? For since, in the wisdom of God, the world did not know God through wisdom, it pleased God through the folly of what we preach to save those who believe. For Jews demand signs and Greeks seek wisdom, but we preach Christ crucified, a stumbling block to Jews and folly to Gentiles, but to those who are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God. For the foolishness of God is wiser than men, and the weakness of God is stronger than men." --1 Corinthians 1:18-25
soul creator said:You're the guy who believes in predestination right?
I was predestined to not agree with you....ow my brain!DeusTrinitas said:The Bible teaches predestination, so, yes, I believe in it. I don't know if that means I'm the guy you're thinking of or not, though.
Shanadeus said:So I think it's wise we steer away the discussion from issues which will only end up in insults.
Does anyone like the idea of reincarnation?
I feel that if you don't keep your memories than it's pretty much the same as death, unless you can somehow retrieve all memories at some point in the reincarnation cycle.
We are our memories after all.
If you were to keep all memories between the various lives then it'd be pretty awesome, being born into a possibly new world and time yet still be the same person would be amazing.
DeusTrinitas said:The Bible teaches predestination, so, yes, I believe in it. I don't know if that means I'm the guy you're thinking of or not, though.
Mumei said:Question to any of the other atheists in the topic - am I the only atheist here who couldn't stand the schmaltzier Christian inspirational music when s/he was a teenager, but now really enjoys it?
I have no idea why, but I've really started liking them.
soul creator said:Of course, no one should use that as evidence of god/spiritual beings, because Sigur Ros also can bring me to tears, and as far as I know, they're not deities.
Mumei said:Question to any of the other atheists in the topic - am I the only atheist here who couldn't stand the schmaltzier Christian inspirational music when s/he was a teenager, but now really enjoys it?
I have no idea why, but I've really started liking them. :lol
Mumei said:Question to any of the other atheists in the topic - am I the only atheist here who couldn't stand the schmaltzier Christian inspirational music when s/he was a teenager, but now really enjoys it?
I have no idea why, but I've really started liking them. :lol
DeusTrinitas said:I love Sigur Ros. I'm going to see Jonsi perform solo in Kansas later this month.
soul creator said:yeah, I wish he or Sigur Ros would come to Texas at some point :lol
Btw, you can listen to his new album is on NPR
DeusTrinitas said:That's funny because I live in Texas. I'm actually driving up to Kansas to see him. I saw Sigur Ros when they were at Bass Hall in Fort Worth in 2006. They were amazing!
the_concierge said:Needless to say, it's a fairly complex and emotional state to be in. Is anyone else experience / has anyone gone through a similar experience? What led you to that point? What was the outcome? I'm not looking for answers, just shared experiences.